A Murder in Salem
In 1830, a brutal crime in Massachusetts riveted the nation—and inspired the writings of Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne
- By E.J. Wagner
- Photographs by Chris Beatrice
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2010, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 7)
Webster’s summation was later deemed a masterpiece of oratory. “The terrible power of the speech and its main interest lie in the winding chain of evidence, link by link, coil by coil, round the murderer and his accomplices,” British literary critic John Nichol wrote. “One seems to hear the bones of the victim crack under the grasp of a boa-constrictor.” Samuel McCall, a prominent lawyer and statesman, called the speech “the greatest argument ever addressed to a jury.”
After just five hours of deliberation the jury accepted Webster’s contention that Frank Knapp was a principal to the crime and convicted him of murder.
“The town now begins to grow rather more quiet than it has been since the murder of Mr. White,” Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote in a letter to a cousin, “but I suppose the excitement will revive at the execution of Frank Knapp.”
Hawthorne, a still-struggling, 26-year-old writer living in his mother’s home in Salem, was riveted by the case. The son and grandson of respected sea captains, he was also a descendant of John Hathorne, one of the infamous hanging judges of the witchcraft trials. The family connection both fascinated and repelled the future novelist, and no doubt informed his lifelong interest in crime and inherited guilt. At the time of the Knapp trial, Hawthorne was writing short fiction for local papers, including the Salem Gazette, which covered the story assiduously. Some scholars have suggested that Hawthorne wrote some of the newspaper’s unsigned articles about the murder, though there is no hard evidence to support that.
In letters, Hawthorne described the town’s “universal prejudice” against the Knapp family and expressed his own ambivalence about the jury’s verdict: “For my part, I wish Joe to be punished, but I should not be very sorry if Frank were to escape.”
On September 28, 1830, before a crowd of thousands, Frank Knapp was hanged in front of Salem Gaol. His brother Joseph, tried and convicted in November, met the same fate three months later. George Crowninshield, the remaining conspirator, had spent the night of the murder with two ladies of the evening, who provided him with an alibi. After two trials he was acquitted by a now-exhausted court. The two men who had been in the company of George in the gambling house were discharged without trial.
By September 9, 1831, Hawthorne was writing to his cousin that, “The talk about Captain White’s murder has almost entirely ceased.” But echoes of the trial would reverberate in American literature.
Two decades later, Hawthorne found inspiration in the White murder in writing The Scarlet Letter (1850). Margaret Moore—the former secretary of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society and the author of The Salem World of Nathaniel Hawthorne—argues that Webster’s ruminations on the uncontrollable urge to confess influenced Hawthorne’s portrayal of the Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter. Dimmesdale is tortured by the secret of being the lover of Hester Prynne—and when Hester hears Dimmesdale’s final sermon, Hawthorne writes, she could detect “the complaint of the human heart, sorrow-laden, perchance guilty, telling its secret, whether of guilt or sorrow, to the great heart of mankind; beseeching its sympathy or forgiveness—at every moment—in each accent....”
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Comments (10)
i wanna cite dis 4 a project dude!
Posted by Billy on January 16,2013 | 11:55 AM
Was Poe really inspired by this article?
Posted by Dawson Warner on November 15,2012 | 09:30 AM
Actually, crimes in those days were usually reported in a highly inaccurate and sensational fashion. Poe did not feel he had "solved" the Mary Rogers case through newspaper reports--they truly led him astray--but because he claimed to have "inside information." (It's anyone's guess if that was the truth or not.)
Posted by Undine on October 31,2012 | 06:44 PM
wat u kill that man fer.
Posted by Bubba McBillybob Jr. III on April 9,2012 | 02:29 PM
interesting.... wow!
Posted by me on December 14,2010 | 05:54 PM
@ bcarter3 - Well, it isn't a murder mystery, it's a historical piece, and the murderer is a matter of public record. We get a capsule of what happened, and then a detailed article on the event, investigation, trial and its legacy.
I agree this was a great article, which is one I read aloud to my vision-impaired grandmother, who enjoyed it as well.
Posted by Daniel (no relation) Hawthorn on November 26,2010 | 08:42 PM
was such a misterious article, but a pretty good one.. i hope to find next time something relative with korean singers or bands, they could be even more interesting ..
Posted by Milagros on November 11,2010 | 11:07 AM
Indeed, a fascinating story. One can almost taste the times of E.A. Poe and Hawthorne. I think Arthur C. Doyle was familiar with the story too. Modern journalists can learn something from their 19th century forerunners. Crimes were related so accurate in the newspapers of those days, Poe was able to solve the crime of Mary Rogers by reading the papers (so I've been told.)
Try that today.
Roland
Netherlands
Posted by Roland on November 11,2010 | 07:47 AM
Great article but I agree with the above comment; disappointed about the caption!
Posted by Donna on November 10,2010 | 02:09 AM
This is a fascinating and beautifully written story.
But why on earth do you reveal the identity of the murderer in the caption for the illustration at the beginning of the article?
Posted by bcarter3 on October 31,2010 | 03:28 PM